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Nehru: The Making of India

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Looks at the social and cultural background and public and private lives of the Indian prime minister

624 pages, Paperback

First published April 14, 1989

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About the author

M.J. Akbar

18 books92 followers
Mobashar Jawed "M.J." Akbar (born 11 January 1951) is a leading Indian journalist and author. He was the Editorial Director of India Today, India's leading weekly English news magazine published by the Living Media group till his resignation in October 2012. He also had an additional responsibility of overseeing the media conglomerate's English news channel, Headlines Today.
He launched "The Sunday Guardian", a weekly newspaper in 2010, and continues to serve as Editor-in-Chief. He is also the founder and former editor-in-chief and managing director of The Asian Age, a daily multi-edition Indian newspaper with a global perspective.
He has written several non-fiction books, including Byline (New Delhi: Chronicle Books, 2003), a biography of Jawaharlal Nehru titled Nehru: The Making of India, a book on Kashmir titled Kashmir: Behind the Vale, Riot After Riot and India: The Siege Within. He also authored The Shade of Swords, a cohesive history of jihad. Akbar's recent published book is Blood Brothers, a skillfully crafted family saga covering three generations and packed with information of events in India and the world, particularly the changing Hindu-Muslim relations.
His book Blood Brothers has been translated into Italian as Fratelli di Sangue. It was released in Rome at the headquarters of Adnkronos on 15 January 2008.
He published his latest book "Tinderbox: The past and future of Pakistan" in January 2012 discussing the themes of identity crisis and class struggles in Pakistan.
Akbar was also the editor-in-chief of The Deccan Chronicle, a Hyderabad-based news daily.

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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Mikey B..
1,139 reviews487 followers
July 7, 2013
What a history! The struggle and overthrow of imperialism, religious strife, nation building and civil war are all in here. Plus two of the great leaders of the twentieth century – Gandhi and Nehru. By great leaders I mean humanistic and genuinely good and well meaning for their people.

Both Gandhi and Nehru had different approaches – Nehru was more down to earth and viewed science and technology as assets to be harnessed for his country. Also he came from a rich family – his father was a prosperous lawyer who joined India’s “swaraj” (independence movement). Both Nehru’s fell under Gandhi spell.

Jinnah is portrayed as devious in his quest for Pakistan. It would seem he only wanted to assume the mantle of Muslim power. He was an inward looking man – not a Gandhi or Nehru who accepted the diversity in India. Both Gandhi and Nehru nurtured democracy in India and both were opposed to the partition that Jinnah wanted.

The author describes Nehru as an open-minded introspective politician who loved his people and country. He did spend many years in jail during the indenpence movement where he did much soul-searching and writing. This was possibly due to the “benevolence” of British prisons - as compared to Stalinist or Nazi jails of the same era. Some of India’s democracy was inherited from its’ imperialist ruler.

The author has an approach from the inside looking out. The only detriment is that there is a lot of name-dropping in this book – there were many names I was unfamiliar with. Nevertheless the canvas of India is wide, varied and enthralling.

The author paints a very concise history of the Sino-Indian war which culminated in Chinese treachery in 1962. Nehru is portrayed as being somewhat naïve concerning China’s designs on India’s border.
Profile Image for E.T..
1,033 reviews295 followers
October 14, 2013
Reading a biography is like living a life. Once.
Thankfully, I did not pick the standard biography by Breecher (as it published in 1959) or the exhaustive one by S.Gopal (didn't trust him).
This book is the benchmark of how a pol biography should be written. Rather than following the central figure and describing events around him it does the opposite. The narrative gives u a comprehensive picture of India from 1880s to 1964 and places Nehru in it. Secondly, a very balanced and exhaustive coverage of events including the INA trials in 1946 and the Navy Mutiny. Infact, I enjoyed so much that I picked up 3 more bios in parallel (reviews another day). The writing is stylish and bcoz he is a journalist, he has an acumen for politics which scholars lack. Superlative.
Profile Image for Anil Swarup.
Author 3 books721 followers
November 15, 2013
It is a fitting tribute to the "founder" of Indian nation. Akbar is candid, as he always is and conveys his thoughts with precision and perception.
Profile Image for Ankur.
3 reviews
November 15, 2015
A fascinating read into the life of Pandit Nehru. M. J. Akbar captures the historical events around Nehru's life very eloquently, and makes the book feel more of a history book than a biography. The historical narrative presented provides key insights into the life of other leading figures of Nehru's time as well, and portrays Nehru's life in context with the then realities.
Akbar spends most of the time in the book in the pre-1947 era, which undoubtedly does deserve a larger share. Though for a biography, I'd have loved to read in more detail about Nehru's life after independence as well. For example, Akbar only glosses over the economic policies, educational reforms, etc. initiated by Nehru. The foregin policy ideas, which Nehru clearly was very skilled at, is discussed in sufficient detail.
All through the book, you can't miss Akbar's admiration for Nehru. But what makes this book an objective portrayal is that Akbar's reasoning for praising Nehru never sounds sycophantic. He clearly doesn't mince words when it comes to criticize Nehru on his mistakes (of which Akbar finds two major ones: the Kashmir UN issue and the China war). Finally, Akbar succeeds convincingly in depicting Nehru as the hero of India's launch into a successful democracy, a title he truly deserved.

Edit: typos
34 reviews14 followers
August 25, 2013
A poignant and well researched book which intertwines the journey of Indian struggle for Independence with life journey of Nehru.The book succeeds in bringing real Nehru without any pretentions or hangup of putting Nehru into silos of morality or perfidy.The author tries to cover aspects of Nehru's life which are not neccasarily patronizing towards the leader,including issues like Edwina-Nehru affair and countless escapades post Kamala Nehru's death. The best part about the book is that it tries to deconstruct Nehru without mixing any ideological bias which the author may hold for/against Nehru.
1 review
February 6, 2014
M J Akbar is a historian more than a journalist. And he doesn't hold back his knowledge of history at any point in this book. Hence you end up becoming knowledgeable about M K Gandhi, Maulana Azad, Sardar Patel ,Jinnah, Sheikh Abdullah and many more people.
But the crux of this book is obviously Panditji.
The simple conclusion that you draw from this book is that we as Indians are lucky to have had a Founding Father in the form of Panditji.
And it will be a shame if we don't live up to his idea of India.
79 reviews
September 15, 2013
MJ Akbar is one of the most under- rated journalist writer in India today. This biography is a must read for all who have even slightest interest in the political history of India. An easy read and gives a detailed insight into the mind of our first prime minister and one of the greatest world leaders of 20th century.
Profile Image for Vidhya Nair.
201 reviews38 followers
June 17, 2014
An extremely well-written book that chronicles Nehru's life. Loved it. Very inspiring. His relationship with his father was particularly noteworthy and hugely inspiring. I draw on my memory to that section of the book as the hallmark of this book.
219 reviews3 followers
February 1, 2016
Interested in the birth of India, a great read on one of its main founders and the first father of India.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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